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Paly Swims Strong at COLA

Several Palisades-Malibu YMCA swimmers had breakthrough performances at the COLA “JO Max” Long Course Championships last weekend at the Los Angeles Memorial pool on the campus of USC. Ten-year-old Lila Lewenstein swam nine events and finished with five A times and an AA time in the 100-meter Breastroke, which she won her division in 1:42.70, shaving 9.13 seconds off of her previous best. She also won the 50 Butterfly in a personal-best 41.46 seconds and added four second-place finishes. She had a 26.31 second improvement in the 100 Butterfly and a 22.76 second improvement in the 200 Individual Medley. Lila’s brother, Ben, competed in six events in the boys’ 13-14 age division, knocking 13.30 seconds off of his personal best in the 100 Backstroke. Thirteen-year-old Shelby Pascoe recorded A times in seven of her eight events. She won her division in both the 100 and 200 Breaststroke and swam second in the 1500 Freestyle, where she lowered her time by a whopping 39.91 seconds. Pascoe also had three fourth-place finishes. Catherine Wang, 11, won her division of the 11-12 girls’ 50 Breastroke in 41.65, posting a AA time, then won the 200 Butterfly in an A time of 2:48.10. Wang finished the meet strong, with A times in the 100 Freestyle and 1500 Freestyle events. Nine-year-old Alexander Landau had a strong meet for the boys. He swam 10 events and won his division of the 100 Breastroke in 1:56.30. He was also second in both the 200 Freestyle and 200 Individual Medley and third in the 100 Butterfly and 100 Freestyle. Georgia Johnson, 10, was second in the 9-10 division of the 200 Freestyle and placed third in the 100 Freestyle, improving her best mark by 4.85 seconds. She swam in nine events, also improving by 7.14 seconds in the 100 Backstroke. Swimming in the 13-14 girls’ division, Melina Vanos set personal-bests in two of her five events, including a 5.78-second improvement in the 200 Individual Medley.

Nash Highlights the Unsung Heroes of the American Revolution

Ebenezer MacIntosh is one of historian Gary Nash’s Revolutionary War heroes. He was the poor shoemaker who in 1775 led a crowd of workaday Bostonians to riot in protest of England’s tightening control of the colonies. He was the man who single-handedly aroused the city’s working men to level the Stamp Act office, and destroy the house of the hated administrator of the revenue stamp act. This “shoemaker street general,” Nash says, harnessed the resentment that had been building against the King’s restrictive trade policies, a force that English supporters and colonial leaders would come to see they had sorely underestimated. “Here was someone who was not long on the world stage, but who was very important at that particular moment of the war,” says Nash, who in his new book “The Unknown American Revolution” (Viking) introduces the ordinary people’preachers, enslaved Africans, frontier mystics, disgruntled women and aggrieved Indians’whose radical ideas and agendas fired the American Revolution. Nash will talk about these unsung heroes on Thursday, August 25 at 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. For more than 30 years, the Pacific Palisades resident has been researching and studying the American Revolution from the perspective of the little heroes, not the Founding Fathers who most often dominate the “reigning master narrative.” Those long-forgotten men and women from the middle and lower ranks of America made up most of people of revolutionary America, Nash says. “Without their ideas, dreams, and blood sacrifices, the American Revolution would never have occurred.” Men like Venture Smith, a restive slave brought to the British colonies in the 1740s from West Africa, who through his Paul Bunyan strength and unflagging yearn for liberty, managed to buy freedom for himself and for his family. Women, too, played a pivotal role in the events leading to revolution. They were the engines behind the consumer boycotts of the 1770s. Withdrawing from the Atlantic market meant that the colonies, no longer importing textiles, began to spin cotton, linen and woolen cloth. In 1769, Boston built 400 spinning wheels, and from these wheels came 40,000 skeins of “fine yarn, to make any kind of women’s wear,” Nash writes. A professor, scholar and currently the director of the National Center for History in the Schools at UCLA, Nash has written and edited more than 20 books on early American history. Although most are scholarly works used for college courses, “Red, White, and Black,”1974 has reached a lay market and is in its fifth edition. He admires the work of superstar biographer David McCullough, whose current book on the American Revolution, “1776” has aroused much interest, not to say brisk sales. Nash points out that his fellow historian’s strength is his style. “McCullough really knows how to read the public. He is good at capturing dramatic moments. “They didn’t tell us in graduate school to be as turgid and impenetrable as possible,” Nash says, laughing. “We were just told to be scholarly.” In “The Unknown American Revolution,” Nash creates a clear and colorful landscape, from the colonial seaboard to Indian country east of the Mississippi and enlivens it with men and women, both brave and boastful. One can immediately understand how uncertain was the commitment of those men who threw their lot with the Americans. Many, many colonists refused to support revolution and fled to England or Canada. Others sat on the fence until the battle came to them, Nash says. “The colonists for the most part were very conservative and afraid that once the genie’the hobgoblin of democracy’was released, this was going to be a different country and they wouldn’t like it.” Those who did fight for America were a rag-tag lot, who suffered the deprivation of weather, food, clothing and heart. “Had Washington not been as stubborn as he was’he never gave up’he couldn’t have put up with the loss of so much support,” Nash says. “And after the war, returning soldiers often had to sell their bounty of 50 acres out West just to get back home. Some of them walked as many as 800 miles, from North Carolina to Massachusetts.” Nash says that while he didn’t start out knowing that he wanted to be a historian, he did grow up in Philadelphia, which is about 10 miles from Valley Forge. “The Revolutionary War sites were always a mystique. As a kid I saw earth fortifications or the log huts where the soldiers lived in 1777-78. And Philadelphia is certainly a history-sod city.” When Nash got to Princeton, he did major in history and after a stint in the Navy, he returned to Princeton as a junior administrator and “developed an appetite for history,” going on to study for his Ph.D. His dissertation became his first book, “Quakers and Politics: Pennsylvania 1681-1726.” Despite the dismal statistics on Americans’ historical knowledge, Nash refuses to be pessimistic. “I don’t think that we’re history amnesiacs, rather recovering huge chunks of our history that we’re forgotten. I know that when you put 20 questions on a multiple-choice test, the numbers come out badly. But these tests don’t tell us anything about a student’s knowledge of history; they are not asking the right questions. They’re asking trivial questions.” It’s clear from Nash’s books and his work in developing history curricula in public schools, that the key to making history lively is relevancy. “Jane Pauley told me on her show that her son loved history and went happily along with his father, Gary Trudeau, to all the Civil War sites, while her daughter didn’t like history one bit. So, Jane took her to many of the pioneer women’s sites, and that made the difference.” Nash spends about a quarter of his day on the national History Standards Project, whose goal is to build a bridge between the academic historians and teachers in the trenches. To this end, he sets up institutes for professional development in which he not only teaches, but recruits historians to join him. Recently, a two-week institute for Whittier district high school teachers consisted of a field trip to Civil War sites, while another for Riverside, Los Angeles and Orange Counties third and fourth-grade teachers included an 11-day field trip through California. “I think that interest in history is a high point; look at the success of the History Channel and the Ken Burns’ documentaries,” Nash says. In addition, he cites the high numbers of students in history Ph.D. programs. “When I joined the faculty at UCLA in 1966, there were 65 members in the department, including one woman and one African American man. As the profession has been diversified, all sorts of new questions have come up, and a mountain of scholarly work has followed.” For his part in unearthing more of the minor but pivotal players in early American history, Nash is co-writing a book with Colgate professor Graham Hodges about the triangular relationship among Thomas Jefferson, Thaddeus Kosciuszko, colonel of engineers in the Continental Army, and Agrippa Hull, a free-born black veteran who served under Kosciuszko. Nash says that he aimed in his current book “to capture the revolutionary involvement of all the component parts of some three million wildly diverse people living east of the Mississippi.” His work continues in the ongoing tale of the republic’s founding.

New Course Applies Yoga to Treat Common Ills

“Yoga is inseparable from my life force.” Larry Payne didn’t actually say that, but he could have. A yoga instructor for over 25 years, Payne has attended to all aspects of the practice, expanding his knowledge and commitment to the philosophy with an intelligent attention to the Western mindset and perspective in his teaching. This fall, Payne is offering a class at Loyola Marymount University, designed to train yoga teachers to be yoga therapists and apply classical yoga postures for use in clinical settings to help treat common ailments and conditions. “The biggest complaint that patients have is that yoga teachers have little training in anatomy and physiology, and that doctors have zero training in movement,” Payne says. “Right now, a doctor, who is an excellent diagnostician, may say to a patient’let’s say a 40- or 50-year-old man”Take yoga.’ If this man walks into an Ashthanga class, he’ll get murdered.” Payne hopes that after his course, participants will be equipped to work with various medical specialists, chiropractors, osteopaths and physical therapists. The Level I course will focus on the musculoskeletal system. Students will meet one weekend a month for a year and address principles of practice, anatomy for yoga teachers, the origin and treatment of common low-back pain and upper back, knee and hip problems. In addition, the course will cover communication tools for working with doctors, including reading reports and understanding terminology and clinical notes. The optional Level II course offered the following year will focus on other systems of the body, including the circulatory, respiratory, digestive, nervous, reproductive and endocrine systems. Although Payne now follows a well-established lifestyle of yoga and healthful eating habits, including meat, he was not a natural. An overstressed advertising executive in the late 1970s, with severe back pain, Payne in desperation took a “why-not” stab at yoga. “I remember being embarrassed, thinking I couldn’t possibly do those strange postures the right way,” Payne recalls in his book “Yoga Rx.” With a compassionate teacher who instructed him gently with breathing, stretching and relaxation, Payne’s pain disappeared for the first time in two years. That epiphany sparked a life change. “I had enough money from advertising to sustain myself for a couple of years,” Payne says. His conversion took him to yoga centers all over the world and, eventually, to India, where he has returned several times. In 1981, he returned to Los Angeles and became a full-time yoga teacher and founded the Samata Yoga Center in Venice. In his own practice and in his classes, Payne has always kept the Western mentality in mind. He has developed User Friendly Yoga, which focuses on postures and breathing to help the practitioner become more aware of his or her body’s posture, alignment and movement with the goal of leading to deeper awareness of the self and to one’s surroundings. While it can be argued that yoga by its very nature is therapeutic, Payne distinguishes yoga therapy as yoga postures that are specifically adapted to treat specific health problems, such as back pain, asthma, migraines or menopause. “There are a lot of people who don’t fit into a group yoga class,” Payne explains. “For example, those who need one-on-one attention and who can’t do what’s being served by the classes’which are generally geared for healthy people and for general conditioning.” In yoga therapy, Payne does an evaluation and constructs a series just for individuals. To help them do it, he makes a CD of instructions for them. “Compliance is hard,” he admits, “but pain is a great incentive.” On one of his trips to India, Payne visited a number of yoga therapy clinics, which he recalls with a grimace. “When I reported a digestive problem, I was instructed to drink 10 glasses of salt water and throw up. If you’ve got the time and you’re there with people who know what they’re doing, that’s fine, but that wouldn’t be appealing here.” In the West, a yoga therapy practice has to be compatible with our culture as well as practical, user-friendly and safe, Payne says. “There are several important principles that I feel capture the essentials of effective yoga therapy practice in our modern world. These are: commitment to a daily yoga therapy program; combining breath and movement; emphasizing function over form; incorporating dynamic and static principles of motion; focusing on the spine; slowing down your pace; avoiding competition and staying faithful to sequencing.” While most of these principles are self-explanatory, a few need further explanation. For example, the emphasis on function over form. Payne is far more concerned that we be attuned to our own body, rather than pushing ourselves too far to achieve some idealized perfect posture. Staying faithful to sequencing is important, too, Payne says, because there is logic to the sequences of the postures that maximizes the benefits. The routine, whether 10 minutes or a half-hour, always starts with a transition posture that leads the practitioner away from the stress of the day, followed by a warm-up to prepare the body for the main postures. The postures are selected to address the goal, and are always balanced by compensating postures to bring the body back to neutral. Finally, breathing exercises and relaxation techniques allow rest before the practitioner moves back into his or her day. Payne’s class at Loyola Marymount is geared toward applicants who have completed a 200-hour yoga teacher training or its equivalent. Payne will introduce the first lecture followed in subsequent weeks by Western medical doctors, an ayurvedic practitioner, chiropractor, physical therapist, and a specialist in allopathic and traditional osteopathic medicine. Payne prepared the course with Dr. Richard Usatine, who co-authored “Yoga Rx,” and who has taken a holistic approach to treating patients. Usatine is vice-chair for education in the department of family and community medicine at the University of Texas at San Antonio. The Yoga Rx program begins October 8 at Loyola Marymount. Call 338-1971. Payne’s class at Jiva Yoga Studio on Sunset meets Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m.

Coastal Commission Approves YMCA Bid

This aerial view looking west along Sunset shows the YMCA Pumpkin Patch and Christmas Tree lot at the entrance to Temescal Gateway Park.
This aerial view looking west along Sunset shows the YMCA Pumpkin Patch and Christmas Tree lot at the entrance to Temescal Gateway Park.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

The California Coastal Commission gave the Palisades-Malibu YMCA two important approvals on Tuesday. First, the commission granted permission for the Y to continue its annual pumpkin and Christmas tree sales and youth day camp at the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Sunset. Second, it advanced the Y’s option to purchase the 3.95-acre site by approving the division of the entire 56.78 acres owned by the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy into two parcels. The commission’s actions culminated a decade-long battle between the YMCA and its opponents, who had argued for retaining the parcel as open space, free for public access. Tuesday’s meeting was the third time commissioners heard the case, which drew supporters on both sides to Costa Mesa, where they had to wait until 4 p.m. for the agenda item to be heard. While there was no dispute as to the value of the Y’s retail sales and summer day camp, the disagreement fell on three issues: (1) Could the Conservancy, a public agency, sell open space to a private, albeit nonprofit, agency? (2) Would there be adequate protection of the native coastal shrub? And (3) would there be future development of the property? In summarizing the issues, the commission staff vetted the questions and defined conditions and restrictions on the Y’s activities. Regarding open space, the commission report mandates that the environmentally sensitive habitat area (ESHA) in the upper northern portion of the property (away from Sunset) be untouched because of the presence of coastal sage shrub, except for vegetation removal for fire management (on the eastern portion slope nearest the residences above) and non-natives. In addition, the Y must re-route an existing road to the swimming pool up the canyon, out of the ESHA area. Regarding public access, the Coastal Development Permit requires the Y to dedicate and maintain a 10-ft.-wide access trail easement, beginning at Sunset and providing public access to the Conservancy property to the north. In addressing future development of the property, the commission expressly stipulated that “any future activity be limited to day-camp activities and recreational programs available to all members of the general public, temporary events, seasonal fundraising sales, low-cost public recreation and open space.” These restrictions transfer with the land, no matter the ownership. The coastal permit also stipulates that any future sale of the land must be offered to government agencies first, including the California Department of Parks and Recreation. Before the commission issues the permit, the Y must submit in writing its acceptance of the permit deed restrictions and the special conditions on the use of the property, which will be carried with the property. Speaking on behalf of the opponents, Save The Coast Foundation, Friends of Temescal Canyon and No Oil, Inc. attorney Frank Angel once again argued that the Coastal public access policy prohibits the Conservancy from selling public land to a private entity. “If you allow the land division, they [YMCA] as a private landowner will be be able to exclude the general public access,” Angel said. Responding to the question of whether the land should be considered open space, the commission staff concluded that the Y had optioned the land since 1972 in an agreement with the former owners, the Presbyterian Synod, and that the Coastal Act had no jurisdiction until its establishment in 1977. “The option property was never truly publicly owned open space,” said Ralph Faust, chief counsel for the commission. Sherman Stacey, attorney for the YMCA, agreed to the commission staff findings and restrictions and underscored the Y’s open door policies. “The YMCA provides recreation opportunities to both members and non-members at nominal rates,” he said. In responding to the suggestion that the Y choose a long-term lease over a lot split, Stacey rejected that option, arguing that a lease would be handled by the city’s General Services department and, as such, would be subject to an open bidding process that would not recognize the Y’s long-term option agreement. In addition, General Services leases are limited to five years, he said. Commissioner Sara Wan’s request for further clarification on future activities on the site was answered by commission attorney Faust, who reiterated the point that prior to the issuance of the Coastal Development Permit, the applicant will submit documentation that binds it “to the covenants, conditions and restrictions on the use and enjoyment of the property.” These restrictions are quite onerous on the property and carry attentive stewardship, according to Randy Young, an opponent speaking on behalf of the Palisades Historical Society. “The Y has responsibility for this open land, the defined ESHA, putting up a road, putting in a walkway and recognizing that this is a public site,” Young said. “When privatized, the Y will have taken on a major responsibility.” For its part, local YMCA executive director Carol Pfannkuche heralded the decision as “a victory for the whole community, for thousands of Palisadians who have supported the YMCA for 40 years, for those current and future participants in YMCA programs at Sunset and Temescal, and even for those who have opposed this decision because they will now have the opportunity to see that the YMCA is a responsible and caring community organization.”

Rosendahl Lunches at Mort’s

Palisades Chamber of Commerce President Sandy Eddy optimistically told City Council candidate Bill Rosendahl this spring that when he won in May, she wanted him to install the new Chamber officers. Rosendahl promised if he won, he would, and he kept his promise. When Rosendahl came to town to install the officers in June, Eddy asked if he would donate his time for a lunch for a silent auction item. He agreed and three lucky bidders, Philip Kamins, D.D.S., Stefano Coaloa, and Victoria Harris, were the winners. Last Thursday, at Mort’s Palisades Deli, owner Bobbie Farberow paid for the lunch for the three bidders, but Rosendahl wouldn’t accept a free lunch. “I have to buy my own lunch, that’s my rule,” Rosendahl said. He doesn’t want his office to have the appearance of impropriety. Harris, a board member of California Wildlife Center, a nonprofit organization based in Malibu that does wildlife rescue, asked Rosendahl how it felt to be a councilman. “I’ve been playing the journalist for so many years asking questions that now it’s time for me to answer the questions,” he said. He explained that when he was running for 11th District councilman, two-thirds of the people in that district didn’t know him from television. He had to sell himself as a complete stranger. Some of the time it was good; he’d talk to people and after they met him they’d say, “I’m going to vote for you.” He’d respond, “Can I hug you?” Rosendahl also said there were rough moments: he’d go to a house and after introducing himself, the person would say, “It’s a politician,” and slam the door in his face. Gradually he felt that he was making headway when he saw the lawn signs go up, and more and more people were attending his “meet and greets.” On May 15, he turned 60 and two days later he won the council seat. A friend calls him a congenital optimist. Rosendahl agrees with that. “I’m a positive spirit. I wouldn’t have run for office as a 60-year-old if I wasn’t.” Harris asked Rosendahl about his position on closing the controversial Sunshine Canyon landfill. The landfill accommodates the solid waste for much of Los Angeles County and is located north of Granada Hills Rosendahl said his initial reaction was to vote to close the dump, but then he started asking “a million questions.” He discovered that there are several problems, the most immediate being, “If the landfill is closed, where do you put the garbage?” Rosendahl said. “We have to use Sunshine because we have no other alternative. Last Friday, he voted yes to extend the contract for five years, but with the idea of having alternative solutions in place when the next vote comes early in 2006. Currently, only residential areas are recycling in Los Angeles. Rosendahl supports getting the whole city on a recycling program, including multi-unit and commercial buildings. He would like to see any new construction be required to have a recycling center built into the complex. He also supports re-use of building supplies. If buildings are torn down, recycle wood and other construction materials, rather than sending them to a landfill. Rosendahl also discovered a town in Germany that burns its garbage which is then converted into clean reusable energy. He would like to do more investigation into alternative solutions to see if they’re feasible in Los Angeles. Rosendahl is on five City Council committees and chairs the Education and Neighborhoods committee. He and Mayor Villaraigosa want to investigate how to bring public education under the City’s umbrella, investigating what works, including charter schools, after-school programs and more parental involvement. When asked about traffic lights and street repaving, Rosendahl explained that projects slated to be implemented this year were approved during predecessor Cindy Miscowski’s term. His office staff is currently reviewing the approved projects. Norman Kulla, district director for Rosendahl, said, “Modest changes will be made because a lot of work was already put into the studies and recommendations.” Developments have already been approved that most people in the district don’t know about, said Rosendahl, who plans to let his constituents know about them through press releases, e-mail and the media. Rosendahl spoke briefly about his role as ad hoc member of the Gang Violence and Youth Development Committee. Though we don’t have gangs in the Palisades, there are gangs in the 11th District. He pointed out Los Angeles is the gang capital of the country. Among other issues that the bidders raised were the idea of businesses helping their neighborhoods pay for traffic lights and other improvements, and the controversy over the leases and rent hikes on Swarthmore. Andrea Epstein, Rosendahl’s field deputy for the Palisades, answered resident Kamins’ concern about his street, Asilomar. “We’re going to stabilize the street,” Epstein said, and explained that the project funding for that street would come through the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and that issues were currently being addressed. Beaming at his deputy, Rosendahl spoke about his staff selection: “I pick people smarter than I am, and then I empower and delegate. I diffuse my power. I have a hybrid staff that’s unique with a variety of people of different ages and interests.”

Curt and Leola Baer: 1955

Golden Couples of the Palisades

Some 90 guests gathered at Palisades Lutheran Church last Saturday to celebrate with Curt and Leola Baer as they renewed their wedding vows after 50 years of marriage. The Baers’ actual wedding date of February 19 was celebrated at sea on a cruise to Hawaii. Rev. R.L. Meyer, pastor emeritus of Palisades Lutheran and long-time friend to the Baers, officiated at the brief renewal of vows ceremony, while his wife, Carrie, graciously served as organist. The guests were then shown a DVD history of some of the highlights of Curt and Leola’s 50 years together. Guests were especially interested in the sports cars Curt has owned through the years. Then the guests were invited to the patio for drinks, where they were delighted with a surprise visit by the Trojan marching band from Curt’s alma mater, USC. After the rousing serenade, a Santa Maria-style barbecue dinner was served in Lutheran Hall. Special romantic musical entertainment was provided during dinner by Devon Henderson. Among those attending were several members of the original wedding party: Gloria Castleberg-Werbe of Yorba Linda, maid of honor; Robert Sampson of Clovis, best man; Theresa Beno of Upland, flower girl; Claudia Mach of Brookings, Oregon, bridesmaid and sister-in-law; and Bill Mach, usher. Leola’s UCLA roommate Arletta Beloian and her husband Aram journeyed from Potomac, Maryland, for the services. Curt and Leola’s children, son Brian of Cardiff-by-the-Sea, and daughter Stephanie Adamson, her husband Tony and their children Victoria, Sean, and Michele were in attendance and also participated in the service. The Adamsons recently moved from Pennsylvania to Tucson, Arizona. At least nine other couples attending had already celebrated their 50th anniversary. Baers Celebrate Trojan Legacy By KAREN WILSON Palisadian-Post Intern Emeritus In 1955, the University of Southern California Trojans lost the Rose Bowl’the grand prix of college football’to the Ohio State Buccaneers. Faring better that year, however, were Palisadians Curtis and Leola Baer, who celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary this past February 19. At first, Curtis and Leola (Lee) seemed an unlikely match. He was a Santa Monica native and USC junior, while she, born in Oklahoma and raised in Pomona, attended arch-rival UCLA. When Curt’s church youth group threw a party, Lee attended with a fellow UCLA classmate, but she soon left him for the handsome young Trojan. After graduation, they were married at Lee’s Lutheran church in Pomona. In an untraditional twist, the adventurous pair spent their month-long honeymoon on a coast-to-coast road trip, driving from California to Key West, Florida. After that, they went to Cuba'”when it was legal,” Lee jokes. Over the years, she has traded in her Bruin blue and yellow, and now “bleeds red and gold,” just like her Trojan husband. Upon returning to the States, Curt’who had deferred Army enlistment while in college’was drafted into the counter-intelligence corps at Fort Ord, followed by several years in the reserves. Army wife Lee supported her husband as his service took him to San Francisco, Maryland and back to Santa Monica, where Lee gave birth to son Brian and daughter Stephanie. In 1962, the Baers moved their brood to family-oriented Pacific Palisades. The Baer kids both attended Marquez Elementary, Paul Revere Junior High, and Palisades High. “We wanted them to go to USC!” Lee says, but it was not to be. Brian attended California Polytechnic at San Luis Obispo and now works in San Diego for Hewlett-Packard; Stephanie, who lives in the Philadelphia suburbs, graduated from Drake University in Iowa. Still, Curt and Lee have found other ways to carry on their Trojan legacy. Last year, they brought grandchildren Victoria, 11, Sean, 9, and Michele, 7, to the USC football team’s season opener against Virginia Tech. “They loved it,” the proud grandma says. It’s not hard to enjoy time spent with the senior Baers. They are affable and warm, and their enthusiasm for life is infectious. Curt is a veritable encyclopedia on all things Trojan football. Indeed, when this reporter mentions her crush on former quarterback Carson Palmer, he disappears and quickly returns with 2003’s official season guidebook and other memorabilia. It’s not surprising, then, that he’s a founder of the L.A. West Trojan Club'”a support group,” he says, “for those who like USC sports.” This past spring, the group raised funds and drummed up publicity for the oft-overlooked Lady Trojans basketball squad. “Tell her everything else you’re involved with,” Lee says, proudly, thumbing through the football goodies. For the record, Curt is a member of the Palisades Optimist Club, president of the Palisades Republican Club, a founder of the local Graffiti Busters group, and past president of the Village Green Committee. He also does arbitration work for the New York Stock Exchange and the National Association of Security Dealers, for which he handles two or three cases each year. All of this in addition to his day job: formerly a stockbroker, Curt has spent the past two decades selling health and life insurance from his homey office in the 881 Alma Real building. “I can tell you one thing,” he says, nodding at Lee. “She’s very supportive of me.” Over the years, his wife’s accomplishments have given Curt a run for his money. Formerly active with the Santa Monica Bay Women’s Club Juniors and Assistance League, Lee is probably, she laughs, “the only UCLA-er active in the Trojan Club.” On the religious front, both she and her husband are involved with the Palisades Lutheran Church, where Curt is an currently an elder and a past president of the congregation. When they need a break from their busy lives, the Baers enjoy travel’a tradition begun during their 3,000-mile honeymoon. Cruises are a favored adventure; in 2003, they took the entire family on a ship to Alaska, and this year they celebrated their golden anniversary on a cruise to Hawaii. They have also traveled on ocean liners in New Zealand and Australia, while also ringing in the New Year on the Panama Canal in 2001. But these romantic excursions aren’t the only key to their long, happy marriage. “You have to have a good sense of humor and a short memory,” Lee says. Adds Curt, “We have a lot in common’both raised by parents who taught us good character. We’ve tried to do the same with our kids.” When they’re not on the go, the Baers can be found relaxing at home, with Curt working on his prized Mercedes coupe and green-thumb Lee tending to their garden. Or check the parking lot at the Los Angeles Coliseum, where the Baers and their fellow football fans can be found tailgating before big games, wearing red-and-gold sweatshirts and manning a barbecue. And lest anyone should ever point Lee towards the UCLA section, know this: the onetime Bruin apparel and design major waited until her kids were grown, then took an architecture class at USC. “So I’m a Trojan now, officially,” she says. Not that anyone was arguing.

William J. Rea, 85; Longtime Palisadian Was a Federal Judge

Judge William J. “Bill” Rea, a resident of Pacific Palisades for 45 years, passed away on August 3 owing to complications following surgery. He was 85 years old. Nominated by President Ronald Reagan in 1984 and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Rea served with distinction as a U.S. District Court judge in Los Angeles, and continued to try cases up until the time of his passing. “Judge Rea was an outstanding man and coach,” said his Palisades friend Emil Wroblicky, who recalled coaching against Rea’s Orioles team in the youth baseball league at the Palisades Recreation Center in the late early 1970s. Palisades attorney Roger Diamond, who appeared before Rea in both civil and criminal cases, also praised the jurist. “He was a kind, decent man and a very smart judge. He gave us fair hearings and his rulings were proper and correct,” Diamond told the Palisadian-Post. “Although he was appointed by Ronald Reagan, his decisions were not stereotypically conservative. He never hesitated doing the right thing.” Born in Los Angeles on February 21, 1920, Bill Rea graduated from Mt. Carmel High School, entered UCLA and then transferred to Loyola University in Los Angeles on a partial athletic scholarship. He signed a minor league contract with the Chicago Cubs baseball organization as a power-hitting first baseman. After enlisting in the U.S. Navy in December 1941, Rea was placed on inactive duty until he received his degree in economics in June 1942. He attended midshipman school at Notre Dame University and Columbia University, and was commissioned as an ensign in the Navy on November 2, 1942. Following gunnery and torpedo training in San Diego, Rea was assigned as gunnery officer to the destroyer USS Jenkins, where he served with distinction for 31 months in the South Pacific during World War II, including an important role in the Battle of Leyte Gulf. His ship was awarded 18 battle stars and a presidential unit citation. By the end of the war, he rose to the rank of lieutenant commander and was given command of another destroyer. But during the war, the USS Jenkins was damaged by enemy fire, kamikaze attacks and a mine, causing Rea’s ship to return to Long Beach for repairs. The ship hosted visitors, including a young lady from Denver, Colorado, by the name of Cathy Douden, whose brother Pete Douden was also serving on a destroyer. Cathy struck up a conversation with the officer on duty, which led to a romance that lasted the rest of Rea’s life. Following the war, Rea attended law school at the University of Colorado in Boulder, graduating third in his class. He was quarterback of the law school’s intramural football team, which played and defeated the university’s intercollegiate team. The Reas moved to Los Angeles, where Bill was admitted to the bar in 1951. He was recalled to active duty during the Korean War. Rea practiced law as a trial attorney from 1952 until 1968, when Governor Ronald Reagan (a fellow resident of Pacific Palisades) appointed him to the Los Angeles Superior Court. He served as Supervising Judge of the Northwest District in Van Nuys from 1971 to 1980, and also served as Judge pro tem on the California Court of Appeals. In 1984, President Reagan nominated Rea for an appointment to the U.S. District Court, and the U.S. Senate confirmed him on June 15, 1984. During his career, Rea received many honors, including being named as Trial Judge of the Year by both the Los Angeles Trial Lawyers Association and the International Academy of Trial Lawyers. He helped establish the American Board of Trial Advocates in 1958, and in 1987 he founded the ABOTA American Inn of Court, which has become one of the nation’s oldest and finest Inns. The membership later changed the name to the William J. Rea American Inn of Court in honor of its founder. Rea was a guest lecturer at various law schools and bar associations, and co-authored the treatise “California Practice Guide: Personal Injury.” He enjoyed golf, paddle tennis and fishing with his friends on the White River in Colorado, and was a member of Los Angeles Country Club and the Jonathan Club. He was active in several charities, including the Assistance League of Southern California (where his wife was a two-term president), the Braille Institute, the Freedom Foundation, and Sensory Integration International. In Pacific Palisades, Rea was a member of American Legion Post 283 in the Palisades and a parishioner at Corpus Christi Catholic Church, where he was a fixture at the 8 a.m. Sunday mass. He also coached his son John’s Palisades Baseball Association teams for seven years, and continued to coach several years thereafter. Rea is survived by his wife of 58 years, Cathy; by his son John, an attorney who lives in Palos Verdes Estates with his wife, Merredith; and by his grandsons Matthew and Jeffrey. A funeral Mass will be held at Corpus Christi today at 11 a.m., followed by a graveside flag ceremony at Forest Lawn in Glendale and a reception. The family suggests a charitable donation to the Braille Institute (1-800-BRAILLE), or to Home Ownership for Personal Empowerment (H.O.P.E.), 21231 Hawthorne Blvd., Torrance, CA 90503.

Movie Evening at the Park Brings Palisadians Together

“Shrek” opened the second season of Movies in the Park on the outfield grass at the Palisades Recreation Center last Saturday night. David Williams, the event’s co-chair, estimated there were “between 680 and 700 people, based on the park’s head count and our count.” “It’s the best community event I’ve seen,” said Dave Gadelha, Recreation Center director. “I’ve pitched the idea to other parks.” He served free hot dogs during the movie. He had 500 beef and a 100 turkey franks ready for the grill, but wasn’t worried about running out. “In an emergency I can always go over to Ralphs.” Hunter Aarniokoski, 6, and his three-year-old brother Dash ran up with a $5 bill to buy hot dogs. One of the beauties of Movies in the Park is that it’s all community. There are not many places a parent can give money to young children and let them have the independence of buying something while they’re able to watch from a safe distance. Gadelha told the boys the hot dogs were free. While they were waiting, Hunter unfolded a piece of paper and explained, “This is hieroglyphics, which is ancient Egypt writing.” Though the two boys couldn’t spend their money on hot dogs, other food like water, sodas, Pringles and candy were for sale at a adjoining table. Jacob Thompson, a member of Boy Scout Troop 23, is using the proceeds from sales during the four-week series towards his Eagle Scout project. Thompson, 15, who attends Palisades High, is planning to restore a patch of land near the school. Currently, the land is littered and filled with dead grass. He plans to landscape the site and provide benches. (Continued on Page 4) Directly in front of the 15- by 20-ft. screen, Deann and Bruce Heline and Paula and Steve Edwards sat on chairs and blankets, looking perfectly relaxed. Although both couples have two small children, none were in evidence. Deann jokingly said, “I guess we should figure out where they are.” One only needed to turn around to see lots of small children running, chasing and playing while they waited for the movie to start. “It reminds me of the drive-in when we were little,” Deann said. “We’d go early, have dinner and then the kids would go and play on the playground.” The man of the hour was Andrew Bzura, who blew bubbles for his three-year-old son, Billy. Close to a dozen kids joined Billy in trying to pop the bubbles as they danced above the field. Some families played frisbee, while others kicked a soccer ball around or played catch. “I’m pleased with how the community is taking to it.,” said John Wirth, one of the founders of the event. “It’s joyous.” Sam Lagana acted as the evening’s announcer, which involved keeping people posted about the start time as well as helping others locate lost keys. Lagana, who is known as the “The Voice of the Beach Volleyball,” was recently appointed as the Assistant Vice-Chancellor for Athletics at Pepperdine. Not everyone ate hot dogs. Many brought take-out from places like Subway, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Panda Express, and Domino’s. Dan and Judy Clement’s “Sunset Hollywood” picnic of garlic mashed potato salad, basalmic BBQ’d chicken sandwiches, beefsteak tomatoes in basalmic vinegar and small cheesecakes turned picnicking into an art form. On a blanket next to the Clements, long-time Palisadian resident Flora Yeh sat with three different multi-generational families. She convinced those families to move here because “When they were in Santa Monica, I told them to come to the Palisades. It’s a good place to raise children.” James K. Hahn and his wife Jeanne were on a blanket with their three-year-old granddaughter, Amalinalli (Amy). “Amy hasn’t seen a movie before so it will be fun,” Jeanne said. Palisadian Hahn, who has the exact same name as former Mayor Hahn, explained he was glad there’s a new mayor. He would get phone calls at his home from people complaining about noisy trash trucks and asking him to fix their problems. He also had a $2-million lien put against his house by a disgruntled citizen who was sure he was dealing with the Los Angeles mayor. Twenty high school students from Scotland were fortunate enough to attend Movies in the Park, as well as Universal Studios, Disneyland and the Getty Center. Palisades Presbyterian Youth Minister Eric Shaefer had arranged for his high school group to go to Scotland in June, and this past week Fraser Penny from Dunkel Cathedral brought his senior group to the United States. Don Condon, who heads the Youth Director’s Council based in Santa Monica, brought nine of his volunteers to help with set-up and take-down. The group consists of 8th through 12th graders who do 100 hours of community service a year as part of their requirement. Once it was dark enough, the event started with a three-minute short called “Deere John.” The short was a “tongue-in-cheek” choreographed dance between an earth excavator and a male dancer. Quirky, but fun, the no-dialogue short set the tone for the feature film. This Saturday’s movie, beginning at 8 p.m., will be the Beatles’ “A Hard Day’s Night.” Words for the songs will be passed out, so that eager vocalists can sing along. Chamber President Sandy Eddy reminds people, “Please: no dogs, no smoking, no alcohol and no stick-leg chairs.” Admission is free.

Will Rogers Lifeguards Win Taplin

On the far left, the first person to paddle for Will Rogers C-Division, John Lemoine, appears to be behind four other paddlers. Lemoine caught a final wave, pushing him ahead of his competition and the first out of the water to make a board exchange with the second paddler.
On the far left, the first person to paddle for Will Rogers C-Division, John Lemoine, appears to be behind four other paddlers. Lemoine caught a final wave, pushing him ahead of his competition and the first out of the water to make a board exchange with the second paddler.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Will Rogers 9- to 11-year-olds surprisingly won the Taplin competition in the C division last Saturday at Del Rey Beach. The Taplin Relay is the monster of relays. The team of 18 Junior Lifeguards (six runners, six paddlers and six swimmers) worked as one to finish the race first. It was the ultimate display of teamwork and unity. The 96 JG’s from Will Rogers competed against nine other L.A. County beaches: El Segundo, Manhattan, Torrance, Redondo, Cabrillo, Venice, Santa Monica, Zuma, and Hermosa. Teams of junior lifeguards compete in three divisions: C for 9- to 11-year-olds, B for 12- to13- year-olds and A for 14- to16-year-olds. The JG’s competing had to qualify by beating out other JG’s in order to earn their position. The bodies of the competitors were lean and muscular, attesting to the five weeks of rigorous training that the JG program entails. The different beaches wear old-style beanie swimming caps that loop over the ears. The beaches are color-coded; Will Rogers always wears the purple caps. When the swimmers are in the water, it makes it easier to identify which beach is leading. The teams are co-ed, but by the time boys are 17, their larger muscle mass gives them an edge, making it more likely that they will be chosen for the A team. As a way to even the playing field, the Junior Lifeguard program has incorporated A Girl relays teams which consist of two runners, two paddlers, and two swimmers. “Let’s get this bad boy started,” the announcer said. “Are you ready? Go!” The first race was under way. In the girls A, there were 11 teams and Will Rogers was ninth. Charlotte Graham, who heads the Junior Lifeguard program, explained, “A lot of these girls are cadets. They’re the cream of the crop.” Cadets are 16 and 17 and are being trained and prepared to become lifeguards. They help run the Junior Lifeguards with the regular instructors. In the A Division, after the runners, Brian Anderson, Connor Dunn, Eric Rotelli, Danelo Raab, David Caycook, and Alex Pekelis, had done their portion of the relay on the sand, with perfect baton passes, Will Rogers was in second place as the first paddle boarder sprinted into the ocean. The strong competition in the water from the South Bay beaches moved Will Rogers back to finish eighth. Manhattan Beach took first; Hermosa Beach was second. The last swimmer out of the water was greeted with a Junior Lifeguard tradition that was generous and emphasized the teamwork that all of the competitors feel not only towards their team, but also to their fellow JG’s. All of the runners, paddle boarders, and swimmers that have already finished their portion of the race, hold up their hands and make a tunnel that the last person runs through. “They did really good. I’m proud of them,” Joe Decker, A instructor, said. “It’s all about teamwork. It’s about everyone finishing as a team.” The B division saw 19 teams competing. Will Rogers sent two teams. The Will Rogers A team was second in the water, but slipped to eighth during the paddle board portion of the race. The swimmers pulled the team back into finishing fourth. The swimmers high step into the water, then dolphin through the waves until they can start swimming. They swim around two buoys out into the ocean and upon reaching the beach, circle a flag and sprint up to tag off to the next waiting swimmer. Zuma took first and Will Rogers finished behind Torrance and Manhattan Beach. “Unfortunately, we made some mistakes on the paddle board pass-offs,” Eldin Onsgard, B Instructor, said. “If we hadn’t made mistakes, we could’ve taken first.” Once a paddle boarder leaves the ocean, he or she runs up the sand to their waiting relay team member. They pass off the entire paddle board to the next relay member. It’s not easy to turn the board around, so that the next person can grab the handles and sprint towards the ocean. The final relay race of the day was the C division, which consisted of 17 teams of 9- to 11 year-olds. In a major upset, Will Rogers A team took first, edging out Manhattan Beach which took second. “South Bay always wins,” Cheri Ellington, C instructor, said. “We got third place two years ago and we we’re thrilled then because the competition is just so tough.” The other C instructor, John Boltz, said, “I knew they had it. I just had to make sure they knew it.” Both instructors combined their groups to put together the strongest team they could. The Will Rogers B team had a respectable showing of 14th, just missing placing higher as several teams came in at the same time. The A team runners of Shane Centkowski, Kurtis Rossie, Sawyer Pascoe, Calvin Ross, Charlie Jeffers, and Chase Pion had perfect baton pass-offs, giving the paddle boarders an even start with three other teams as they headed to the ocean. Gradually, the paddlers John Lemoine, Cassandra Kliewer, Kyle Logan, Mara Silke, Victor Amaral and Vinicus Amaral pulled ahead of the field. The swimmers totally demolished the competition, giving Will Rogers first. Catherine Wang, who had qualified to swim at Junior Olympics on that same day, chose to come to the Taplin competition to help her team instead. Hanna Bowers, who was sick, came anyway and swam her leg. Olivia Kirkpatrick, also a JO level swimmer, Sarah Thorson, Pam Soffer, and Jordon Wilovmsky who have all swum on the Y swim team pushed the team to a decisive victory. Bridget Rome, a Venice instructor, said, “The Junior Lifeguard Program emphasizes skills that can last an entire lifetime. We try to give activities that the kids enjoy but will keep them physically active and healthy. Everyone who’s involved learns to be good team players and how to overcome challenges.”

CLASSIFIED ADS FROM THE AUGUST 11, 2005 ISSUE OF THE PALISADIAN-POST

HOMES FOR SALE 1

SPECTACULAR OCEAN/mtn views from newly remodeled 2 bd+2 ba mobile HOME (18 Bali). This double-wide home (1,200 sq. ft) located in desirable Tahitian Terrace offers the beach seeking buyer a very private oasis across from the beach. Over 55 community resort living at its finest. Offered at $469,000. SC Realty, Franklin, (310) 592-6696 or (818) 346-6601 This PALISADES HIGHLANDS TOWNHOME feels like a home with an open floorplan, with granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, A/C, 2-car garage, pool/spa & tennis. $875,000. Broker, (310) 459-7653 TOPANGA HOUSE for SALE. 3 miles fr. ocean. Investors/good rentals. 2 lots, land to expand. 3 stories, 2 bed, 2bath. Open house, Sat.-Sun., 2-6 p.m. $929,000. Call (310) 263-1944 or (626) 643-7556

UNFURNISHED HOMES 2a

VIEW OF QUEEN’S NECKLACE. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, family room. Remodeled kitchen, new carpet. 1 year lease. $5,750/mo. Call Dave, (310) 497-2403 2 BEDROOM + 1 BATH. Walk to Village. $3,200/mo. Call (310) 454-5519 CANYON-VIEW HOME. 2 bed+1.75 bath. Private backyard. Beamed ceilings, freshly painted, new tile, all appliances. Attached 2-car garage. Pets OK. 1 yr lease. $3,400/mo. Avail 8/1. (310) 230-9479 CHARMING must see HOME IN MARQUEZ. Private garden courtyard entrance. 2 bed, 3 bath+den. Hardwood flrs, appl, backyard, street parking, fireplace. Gardener incl. $3,950/mo. (310) 454-3253 $4,500/mo. MARINA del Rey PENINSULA. 2 bedroom+loft, 2 bath, high ceilings, 2 fireplaces, 2-car enclosed garage. Steps to beach. W/D hookup. Wet bar, 2-unit bldg. Avail. early Sept. (310) 821-2953

FURNISHED APARTMENTS 2b

OCEAN VIEW CONDO. 1 bedroom + 1 bath. Remodeled kitchen, great view, nicely furnished, incl utilities. Edgewater Towers. $2,950/mo. Agent, (310) 255-3458

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 2c

CARMEL in THE PALISADES. 2 bedroom, beautiful lot. Walk to village. $3,495/mo. Agent. Call Nancy, (310) 230-7305 PALISADES STUDIO, large kitchen with dinette, stove, refrigerator, walk-in closet, covered parking, laundry, Non-smoker, No pets, one year lease, quiet and clean. $995/mo. (310) 477-6767 LARGE 2 BED+2 BATH. New carpet, w/d, dishwasher, balcony, walk-in closet & patio. Fireplace, Jacuzzi. Village close. Controlled-access bldg. Available now. Call (310) 230-4110 EDGEWATER TOWERS CONDO for lease. Large 2 BD. + 2 BA. ground-floor adj. to pool. Gated, fireplace, tennis/gym, hiking trail, walk to beach. $3,100/mo. incl. utils. Diedra (310) 450-3889 or (310) 238-0104 GORGEOUS OCEAN VU on private drive. 2 bed+2 bath, fireplace, huge patio, totally updated. Great closet space & pool. $3,000/mo. Avail. 9/1. (310) 459-6369 MALIBU BEACHFRONT APT for lease. This is a cozy 1 bedroom+1 bath on the best beach in Malibu. Great location. $3,200/mo. Min. 6-month lease but can negotiate. Call (310) 230-9980 or cell (310) 948-6236

ROOMS FOR RENT 3

ATTRACTIVE, PRIVATE ROOM and bath available in Huntington Palisades home. References req. Mature woman preferred. Rent negotiable. Phone or fax (310) 459-0351

RENTALS TO SHARE 3a

FABULOUS FURNISHED OFFICE to share at PCH & Sunset. Ocean views. 2 private offices (holds 2-3 people). Conference room, reception & common areas. Call (310) 230-6866 SPECTACULAR OCEAN VUS. $1,350/mo. Master-suite, double bath/dressing rooms, large closets, pool, hiking, more. Call Sal (310) 837-1777.

WANTED TO RENT 3b

GARAGE STORAGE SPACE wanted in the Palisades for a car. The owner lives on Chautauqua & drives it twice per month. Please call (818) 557-0135 LOCAL PALISADES COUPLE just sold home. Need at least two bedrooms+1.5 baths for 1 year or longer on quiet street in Palisades, Santa Monica or Brentwood. 832 FICO score. Ideally $3,800 to $4,300/mo., but will consider more. 9/01 or sooner. Call (310) 570-3839 SMALL, FURNISHED PRIVATE room and bath, with easy access needed. Ground floor level, month to month. Please call by August 20th. (310) 699-8899 or (510) 499-9697

VACATION RENTALS 3e

PRIVATE FURN APARTMENT IN PARIS. Services available. 24-hour hotline. Starting at $75 a night for 2 persons (studios to 4 bedrooms). Privacy, economy, convenience as you live like a Parisian. 5 day minimum. Established in 1985. PSR 90, Ave Champs-Elysees. PSR, Inc. (312) 587-7707. Fax (800) 582-7274. Web address: www.psrparis.com. Email: Reservations@psrparis.com

PERSONALS 6b

SEMPER FI. Please help honorable US Marine Vietnam Disabled Veteran dealing with severe medical issues. Call Ray Nasser, (310) 454-7432

COMPUTER SERVICES 7c

COMPUTER SUPPORT – Home – Business – Desktop & Network Support – Low Rates – One Or One Hundred PCs, We Can Help. WWW.FRANKELCONSULTING.COM. Providing Solutions for 18 Years – (310) 454-3886 MARIE’S MAC & PC OUTCALL. I CAN HELP YOU IN YOUR HOME OR OFFICE WITH: Consultation on best hard/software for your needs – Setting up & configuring your system & applications – Teaching you how to use your Mac or PC – Upgrades: Mac OS & Windows – Internet: DSL, Wireless, E-mail, Remote Access – Key Applications: MS Office, Filemaker, Quicken – Contact Managers, Networking, File Sharing, Data backup – Palm, Visor, Digital Camera, Scanner, CD Burning – FRIENDLY & PROFESSIONAL – BEST RATES – (310) 262-5652 YOUR OWN TECH GURU – Set-up, Tutoring, Repair, Internet. End Run-around. Pop-up Expert! Satisfying Clients since 1992. If I Can’t Help, NO CHARGE! COMPUTER WORKS! Alan Perla, (310) 455-2000 COMPUTER CONSULTANT, MAC SPECIALIST. Very Patient, Friendly and Affordable. Tutoring Beginners to Advanced Users. Wireless DSL internet. MAC/PC SET UP – Repair – Upgrade – OS X. Senior discounts! Home/Office. William Moorefield, (310) 838-2254. macitwork.com

GARAGE, ESTATE SALES 7f

PLANNING A GARAGE SALE? a moving sale? a yard sale? a rummage sale? an estate sale? Call it what you like. But call us to do it for you. We do the work. Start to finish. – BARBARA DAWSON – Garage Sale Specialist – (310) 454-0359 – Furniture – Antiques – Collectibles – Junque – Reliable professionals Local References

ORGANIZING SERVICES 7h

Never seem to be enough time or enough you? Call I NEED ANOTHER ME! We offer temporary project coordinating & assistance, both business & personal, relocation management, jobs big & small, too numerous to say here. When asked, “What all do you do?” I say, “What is it you need done?” Call for a free consultation: (310) 459-0418

MISCELLANEOUS 7j

MESSENGER SERVICE/AIR COURIERS. Santa Monica Express, Inc. Since 1984. Guaranteed On-Time! Trucking & Freight Forwarding. Air Courier Door-to-Door Anywhere in the USA. Direct, Non-Stop Service Anywhere in CA. Same-Day Court Filings. Fully Licensed, Bonded & Insured. 24 hours/day, 7 days per week. (310) 458-6000. www.SMEXPRESS.com. PALISADIAN OWNED & MANAGED

NANNIES/BABYSITTERS 8a

P/T NANNY/HOUSEKEEPER available Tuesdays & Fridays. I have a car and good references. Call Estella, (323) 493-1584 PROFESSIONAL BABY NURSE is available for night shifts, to help families with newborns. Contact Ms. Dennis, (310) 226-7097 WEEKEND BABYSITTER and P/T housekeeper available. I can work Sat/Sun as a babysitter and Monday & Thursday as a housekeeper. Call Maximiliana, (213) 388-4661, 6-9 p.m. GREAT PRE-SCREENED Nannies available. Let us help you with your nanny search. We are a dedicated, professional agency and we will find the right match for you. Whether you are looking for full-time or p/time, L/I or L/O help, we can help you. Call Sunshine Nannies at (310) 614-5065 or (310) 801-8309 EXPERIENCED NANNY, CPR & First Aid. Calif DL, clean driving record. Light housekeeping, cooking, local references. Looking for L/I ($400/wk.) or L/O ($15/hr.) SMC student available M, W, Fri. after 12 p.m. and Tues. & Ths. after 2:30 p.m. Call (310) 774-1431

HOUSEKEEPERS 9a

“PROFESSIONAL SERVICES.” We make your home our business. Star sparkling cleaning services. In the community over 15 years. The best in housekeeping for the best price. Good references. Call Bertha, (323) 754-6873 & cell (213) 393-1419 F/T HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE Mon-Fri. Has her own car, good references and speaks English. Call Imelda or Carolina, (323) 752-7589 or (323) 758-1902 GOOD HOUSEKEEPER AVAIL. every other week on Wednesday & Thurs. Excellent references, experience, transportation. Please call Zoila or Francesca, (323) 296-1387 LIVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER/Nanny needed for friendly Palisades family. Tuesday through Saturday. Please call Jennifer, (310) 486-8669 EFFICIENT & FRIENDLY HOUSEKEEPER available 2 days per week. No car, but will happily walk from the bus-stop. Local references available. Call Martha, (213) 247-6855 EXPERIENCED HOUSE & APT Cleaner. I have good references and experience. Please call Victoria, (310) 836-4682 P/T HOUSEKEEPER AVAILABLE 1-3 days per week. Lives in Huntington for 20 yrs. Excellent references. Call (310) 459-8250

ELDER CARE/COMPANIONS 10a

WOMAN NEEDED to HELP a partially handicapped lady with her daily exercises & housework, 5 days per week for a FAMILY of TWO. Prefer you to live-in. Must be able to drive OUR car. No children or pets. Malibu area. Salary is open. Call (310) 457-3393 CAREGIVERS/COMPANIONS: Live-in or out, minimum 2 years experience and 3 work-related references required. Driving preferred. CNA’s/CHHA’s welcome. Bondable. (323) 692-3692 F/T CAREGIVER/BABYSITTER avail. Good refs, reliable and loving care. Speaks English & Spanish. Own transp. Available now. Please call Judy, (310) 806-1463 or (310) 673-9144 CAREGIVER NEEDED for OLDER lady. Evenings from 5 P.M. to 10 P.M. Good food preparation is important. Call (310) 454-9467

GARDENING, LANDSCAPING 11

PALISADES GARDENING – Full Gardening Service – Sprinkler Install – Tree Trim – Sodding/Seeding – Sprays, non-toxic – FREE 10″ Flats, Pansies, Snap, Impatiens. (310) 568-0989 ERIC LANDSCAPING & GARDEN MAINTENANCE. We’ll make your garden dreams come true. Over 15 yrs local experience. References. Call Eric at (310) 396-8218 GARCIA GARDENING SERVICES. Landscaping, maintenance, planting, sprinkler systems and clean-ups. Call Efren, (818) 881-8523, or cell, (310) 733-7414

BRUSHCLEARING 11a

GREAT GRAZING GOATS!! (310) 573-0124

MOVING & HAULING 11b

HONEST MAN SERVICES. 14″ van & dollies. Small jobs to 2 bedrooms. Hauls it all. California/Nevada. Over 12 years. Westside experience. (310) 285-8688

WINDOW WASHING 13h

NO STREAK WINDOW cleaning service. Fast and friendly. Quality service you can count on. Free estimates. Lic. #122194-49. Please call (323) 632-7207

MISCELLANEOUS 13i

PRESSURE WASHING. Driveways, patios, walk-ways, garages, dirt, oil, rust, paint and moss removal. Concrete, brick, natural stone. Clear and colored-stain sealers. Craig, (310) 459-9000 REFRIDG-A-CARE. Pull out vacuum dust from behind & under refrigerator. Runs more efficiently, cooler, less energy consumption. Less wear & tear on your refrigeration cooling system. Owen Cruickshank, (310) 459-5485

COOKING/GOURMET 14a

SHEILA’S KITCHEN. Personal CHEF, catering at your home. Call (310) 270-6761 or (818) 728-0801

PET SERVICES/PET SITTING 14g

BE HAPPY TO COME HOME! Trusted house/pet care in & around Palisades since 1986. Educated responsible. (310) 454-8081 PET HEAVEN – TOTAL PET CARE – Training. Walking. Play groups. Does your dog need manners? Call (310) 454-0058 for a happy dog. SPECIALTY PET CARE. Birds, Reptiles, Aquatic, Exotic. We specialize in animal environments, cages, ponds, water features, R/O. water filtration, dog runs/doors, dog walking/adventures, pet access., pet travel local/interstate, help with CITIES. Insured. (310) 230-7960

FITNESS INSTRUCTION 15a

NORDIC WALKING. Nordic Walking burns up to 46% more calories than regular walking and is excellent for weight loss. Perfect for all ages. Makes a great gift and get the 1st instructional DVD in the U.S. for only $29.50! Personal Training walking classes and Nordic walking poles avail. Check at www.nordicwalkingonline.com or call (310) 573-9000 FITNESS FOR WOMEN. ZIMMERMAN FITNESS FOR WOMEN specializes in weight loss and body shaping. Our private studio near the village offers professional & individual services, using the finest equipment and products. This specific one-on-one training is safe, natural, efficient and exclusively for women. Appointment only. Local references. Call us for a free consultation: (310) 573-9000. www.zfit.com

SCHOOLS, INSTRUCTION 15d

SWIM LESSONS. Local instructor w/ over 14 years experience. Red-Cross Certified. Children, Mommy & Me and adults. Private and semi-private lessons at your home. Call Brian, (310) 505-9231

TUTORS 15e

INDIVIDUALIZED INSTRUCTION. EXPERIENCED TUTOR 20+ YEARS. Children & adults, 20+ yrs teaching/tutoring exper. MATH, GRAMMAR, WRITING & STUDY SKILLS. Formerly special ed teacher. Call (310) 313-2530. SCIENCE & MATH TUTOR, All levels (elementary to college). Ph.D., MIT graduate, 30 years experience. Ed Kanegsberg, (310) 459-3614 MS. SCIENCE TUTOR. Ph.D., Experienced, Palisades resident. Tutor All Ages In Your Home. Marie, (310) 888-7145 SPANISH TUTOR. All grade levels, conversational & all ages. Local refs, flexible hours. Please call Noelle at (310) 273-3593 CLEARLY MATH TUTORING. Specializing in Math! Elementary thru college level. Test Prep, Algebra, Trig, Geom, Calculus. Fun, caring, creative, individualized tutoring. Math anxiety. Call Jamie, (310) 459-4722 INNOVATIVE TUTORING. Math, Reading, Creative Writing. Including reluctant readers and learning differences. Experienced Public School Teacher and Tutor. Grades 1-5. Joanie, (310) 204-0935 THE WRITING COACH: Summertime Application Prep Intensives for next year’s graduating high school/middle school students. Private school application essays. College application essays. SAT/ISEE ESSAYS. 5 individual sessions (flexible scheduling/ your home). Extensive experience, success stories, acceptances. MA, Johns Hopkins; former LA private school teacher and Hopkins CTY instructor; writer/ consultant. Outstanding Palisades/Malibu references. (310) 528-6437 SCIENCE & MATH-Get A Head Start! B.S. Biochemistry, SUNY Stony Brook, M.A. Columbia University, Teacher’s College. Certified New York (Westchester) public school teacher, now teaching in LA! Prefer students 7th grade to college. I live in Brentwood, but prefer to tutor at your home. Practice tests available! SAT II subject test coaching! Academic progress monitoring & notebook organization! Alex Van Name, (310) 442-1093 (hm) or (914) 837-0569 (cell) READING SPECIALIST – Master of Education-Reading and Learning Disabilities – Special Education Teaching Certificate: K-12 – Regular Education Teaching Certificate: K-9 – Elementary Education Teaching Experience: 12 yrs – Services provided for special & regular education students of all levels – Academic areas taught include reading (phonics and reading comprehension) writing and spelling – Private tutoring includes assessing the student’s needs, developing an individualized education program and implementation of that program. Pacific Palisades resident. (310) 230-9890

CABINET MAKING 16

CUSTOM CARPENTRY – Entertainment Units – Cabinets – Libraries – Bars – Wall Units – Custom Kitchens – Remodeling – Designed to your Specifications – Free Estimates – CA Lic. #564263 – (310) 823-8523 CUSTOM WOODWORK AND CABINETS. Craftsmanship quality, 20 years experience, local resident. Local references available. General Contractor Calif. License #402923. Ron Dillaway, (310) 455-4462. rondillaway@yahoo.com

CARPENTRY 16a

COMPLETE FINISH CARPENTRY – Architectural Specs, Custom Design – Decorative: Doors, Molding, Mantels, Paneling, Columns, Stair Balusters & Railing, etc. – For new Construction & Remodeling – Superior craftsmanship, utmost care for details. Lic. #772783. (310) 287-1141

CONCRETE, MASONRY 16c

MASONRY & CONCRETE CONTRACTOR. 36 YEARS IN PACIFIC PALISADES. Custom masonry & concrete, stamped, driveways, pool, decks, patios, foundations, fireplace, drainage control, custom stone, block & brick, tile. Excellent local references. Lic. #309844. Bonded/insured/ workmen’s comp. Family owned & operated. MIKE HORUSICKY CONSTRUCTION, INC. (310) 454-4385 – www.horusicky.com

CONSTRUCTION 16d

PARADISE CONSTRUCTION Building Contractor – All Trades – Lic. #808600. Call (310) 383-1659 CASTLE CONSTRUCTION. New homes, remodeling, additions, fine finish carpentry. Serving the Westside for 20 yrs. Lic. #649995. Call James, (310) 450-6237 PALISADES CONSTRUCTION SERVICES. KEVIN B. NUNNELEY. (310) 454-5029 – 1 (877) 360-6470 Toll-Free. Local References Avail. Lic. #375858 HOWESWORKS, General Contractor. Improve – Build – Install – Repair. Professional Reliable Service. Happiness Guaranteed. Lic. #858904. Daniel Howe, (310) 877-5577

ELECTRICAL 16h

PALISADES ELECTRIC, ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR. All phases of electrical, new construction to service work. (310) 454-6994. Lic. #468437. Insured. Professional Service ELECTRICIAN HANDYMAN. All Phases and General Repairs. Local Service Only (Not lic.). Please Call (310) 454-6849 or (818) 317-8286

FENCES 16j

THE FENCE MAN. 14 years quality workmanship. Wood fences – Decks – Gates – Chainlink & overhang. Lic. #663238, bonded. (818) 706-1996

FLOOR CARE 16l

GREG GARBER’S HARDWOOD FLOORS SINCE 1979. Install, refinish. Fully insured. Local references. (310) 230-4597. Lic. #455608 CENTURY HARDWOOD FLOOR. Refinishing, Installation, Repairs. Lic. #813778. www.centurycustomhardwoodfloorinc.com. centuryfloor@sbcglobal.net – (800) 608-6007 – (310) 276-6407 HARDWOOD FLOORING. Best pricing. Senior discounts, quality workmanship. Bamboo, maple, oak and laminate. Installation & refinishing. Call for free quote. Lic. #763767. Ron, (310) 308-4988 WILSON HARDWOOD FLOORS. Complete installation, refinish and re-coat. Fully insured. License #380380. Ask for Kevin Wilson, (310) 478-7988

HANDYMAN 16n

HANDYMAN, Since 1975. Call for your free est. Local ref. Lic. #560299. Member, Chamber of Commerce. HOOSHMAN (310) 459-8009, 24 Hr. LABOR OF LOVE carpentry, plumbing, tile, plaster, doors, windows, fencing & those special challenges. Work guaranteed. License #B767950. Ken at (310) 455-0803 LOCAL RESIDENT, LOCAL CLIENTELE. Make a list, call me. I specialize in repairing, replacing all those little nuisances. Not licensed; fully insured; always on time. 1 Call, 1 Guy’Marty, (310) 459-2692 PETERPAN – Quality Home Repair -Serving Entire Westside. (Not lic.) Ask for Peter, (310) 663-3633 THE HANDY GUY. Any job, big or small. Over 15 years experience. Free estimates. Lic. #B-858574. Call (310) 216-9034

HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING 16o

SANTA MONICA HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING. INSTALLATION: New and old service and repairs. Lic. #324942 (310) 393-5686

PAINTING, PAPERHANGING 16q

PAUL HORST – Interior & Exterior – PAINTING – 51 YEARS OF SERVICE – Our reputation is your safeguard. License No. 186825 – (310) 454-4630 – Bonded & Insured TILO MARTIN PAINTING. For A Professional Job Call (310) 230-0202. Ref’s. Lic. #715099 MASTERPIECE PAINTING & DECOR – Stenciling/Faux/Plaster effects – License #543487 MFA ’84 – Bill Lundby, (310) 459-7362 SQUIRE PAINTING CO. Interior and Exterior. License #405049. 25 years. Local Service. (310) 454-8266. www.squirepainting.com SPIROS PAINTING, INTERIOR/EXTERIOR. Painting on the Westside since 1980. Lic. #821009. Fax and phone: (310) 826-6097. NO JOB is too small or too big for Spiro the Greek

PLUMBING 16s

ROBERT RAMOS, Plumbing Contractor – Copper repipes – Remodels – New Construction – Service & Repair – Water Heaters – Licensed – Bonded – Insured – St. lic. #605556 – Cell, (310) 704-5353 BOTHAM PLUMBING AND HEATING. Lic. #839118. (310) 827-4040

REMODELING 16u

KANAN CONSTRUCTION – References. BONDED – INSURED – St. Lic. #554451 – DANIEL J. KANAN, CONTRACTOR, (310) 451-3540 / (800) 585-4-DAN LABOR OF LOVE HOME REPAIR & REMODEL. Kitchens, bathrooms, cabinetry, tile, doors, windows, decks, etc. Work guar. Ken Bass, General Contractor. Lic. #B767950. (310) 455-0803 BASIX DESIGNS & REMODELING, INC. WE DO IT ALL – Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling Specialist – Room Additions – Interior/Exterior Paint – Windows/Doors – Custom Carpentry – Plumbing – Electrical – Call For Free Estimate – Toll Free: (877) 422-2749 – Lic. #769443

HELP WANTED 17

WANTED: REGISTERED DENTAL assistant. Fast-paced Brentwood dental office. Experience preferred; Salary based on experience. FAX resume to (310) 826-6369 Live-out HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER WANTED. Tue & Thur only. Good with kids, must drive car, do light cooking & speak English. Refs and experience required. Call Mary, (310) 387-7722 P/T BOOKKEEPER NEEDED for local office. Quicken and Excel experience is required. Approx. 15-20 hrs per week. Call (310) 422-0031 R.E. INVESTMENT Partner sought for arch developments. Custom residences, proj by proj., local & dev. of vacation homes. Princ only. (No brokers, lenders, etc.) $1.0 MM, 2 yrs. Active participation, financial qualifying docs req’d. Great R.o.I. (25%+). Call (310) 454-0685, lv msg P/T ADMIN ASST. Santa Monica Elem School. Strong clerical & communication skills req. Microsoft Office, Excel, FileMaker pro. Be detail oriented & team-player. Email resume: carolina@psone.org SEEKING Full-Time HOUSEKEEPER. Monday thru Friday. Must have experience, speak English and have local references. Will pay top dollar!! Please call (310) 454-3659 P/T CAMPAIGN SUPPORT NEEDED. Database mgt, coordinate meetings, correspondence, develop PR materials. Required: Excellent writing, interpersonal, organizational skills. Proficient in Word/Excel/Outlook. (310) 459-2328, ext. 255 P/T LEGAL SECRETARY needed for PP lawyer. Litigation/computer skills required. Can work @ home. Call (310) 573-9100 RETAIL SALES, PT/FT (incl. Sat). Montana Ave. upscale women’s specialty store seeks confident, motivated and energetic sales professional w/ an ability to develop a clientele. Previous exp preferred but not req. We train. Fax or email resume to Weathervaneii@aol.com or fax (310) 393-2077 Real Estate AGENT needs P/T ASSISTANT. Computer knowledge in Word, Publisher, top producer, communication skills, ability to multi-task, initiative & administrative skills. Call (310) 230-7377 or Email hollydavis@earthlink.net CREATIVE, ENERGETIC SALESPERSON needed in fine stationery/gift-store. Full-time. Weekends a must! Call (310) 573-9905

AUTOS 18b

1969 CORVETTE C-3 COUPE. 350 C.i.d. 480+ HP new, fully-rebuilt, by Phil Cocuzza ($15K). New interior, new suspension, tires, rims, sweet. Loaded, great car. Blk/blk, orig. paint, total 39K miles. $35K Firm. Call (310) 454-0685 SUZUKI HAYABUSA 2003 Motorcycle. Like NEW. Garage kept. Only 1,283 miles. $5,000 obo. E-mail me at: mhilr509@aol.com

FURNITURE 18c

Two gorgeous, nearly new COUCHES, sage velour, loose down pillows: $750 for both. LOWBOY, antique oak: $275. VINTAGE cedar hope chest: $75. Other items. Call (310) 454-1571

PETS, LIVESTOCK 18e

FREE WHITE FLOP-eared bunny is looking for a good home. Sweet neutered male. 1 year old. Owner is leaving for college. Cage & supplies included. Call (310) 459-9077

MISCELLANEOUS 18g

VIKING PROFESSIONAL GAS range. Current top-of-the-line model (VGRC485-6QDWH) lists new for over $6,500. Asking $4,250. White finish, 48″ wide, 6-burners, 12″ wide char-grill, double ovens. Used, but in excellent condition. Perfect for high-end remodel or gourmet kitchen. (310) 207-0085

WANTED TO BUY 19

WANTED: Old tube guitar amplifiers, ’50s, ’60s, etc. Tommy, (310) 306-7746 – profeti2001@yahoo.com